Categories
Cinema

Nihon Chinbotsu – 日本沈没

This weekend I watched “Nihon Chinbotsu” (Japan Sinks), that was one of the films in the top-box office in Japan last year.

It’s a Japanese super production that mixes a horrible love history with Hollywood style special effects showing how earthquakes, volcanoes and tsunamis destroy Japan. The film starts showing a scientist that discovers how a “Megalith” is growing down Japan and explains to the Japanese Prime Minister how it will explode destroying all the country. The rest of the film is uninteresting and is just a succession of special effects destruction and love talks.


How the “Megalith thing” works.

I liked how they show millions of people dying without remorse, I guess I’m used to American productions like Day After Tomorrow where you have to induce that people die. Nihon Chinbotsu shows masses of people being absorbed my huge tsunamis, earthquakes and volcano lava. Maybe Japanese are more used to disasters 🙂 . Another interesting point is that the Prime Minister dies in the first 10 minutes of the movie in an uninteresting accident without any dramatism, the Prime Minister dies just like a “normal” Japanese, Can you imagine that in an Hollywood movie?

A boring film, that is only interesting because of the destruction sequences, but you can see almost all of those cool special effects in the trailer and in some youtube videos.


The trailer.


First two minutes of the movie that shows a beautiful country before the destruction.


Tsunami that destroys Hokkaido.


Tokyo disappears. Hey!!! That’s my home!!

Categories
Funny

Addman


Photo from Ferrán Epifanio

Categories
Society

Wealth inequality in Japan

The Gini index shows us that Japan is one of the countries with less wealth inequality in the world. Gini, is a ratio between the income from high classes and the income from low classes. It shows how big is the difference from rich to poor people, how well richness is shared among the country citizens. If Gini coefficient is 1 it indicates perfect inequality, if Gini is 0 it indicates perfect equality.

At this map you can see countries with Gini near 0 in dark green and as the countries become red their Gini coefficient approaches to 1.


Picture from wikipedia

At this other picture, near the bottom means more equality. For example, look at Hong Kong that is very near from the top, a place with many millionaires living near many poor Chinese people.


Detailed explanation

Japan, Sweden, Norway and Iceland are some of the countries with less inequality in the world. Japan was even more equal in the 70s and 80s, on those times homeless people were inexistent in Japanese territory. Lately, Japanese people are pretty worried because inequality is increasing, and also homeless people are.

Right now there are homeless, there is poor people… but its being more than two years living here and NEVER has anyone asked me for money while walking around Tokyo streets. Three weeks ago I was in Madrid, in it was just after five minutes since I went outside the airport when they asked me for money! In Japan, I even saw a homeless guy withdrawing some money with a credit card! It happens that many Japanese homeless have some money for food and other things but they don’t have enough for a rental. Most of them are retired people, receiving an insufficient pension. Japanese pension system is rotten, but that’s another history…

Japan is the second economy in the world but: Do you know any famous Japanese man or woman? No idea huuh? Me neither, I just searched in the Forbes list, and I found the first Japanese in the 129th position! He is the president of Softbank, and has a fortune of “only” 5.800 million dollars, that’s not a lot compared with American or Arab rich. “Japanese rich people are less rich than in those from other countries”.

On the other hand, in Japan nearly 1% of the population has a fortune of 1 million dollars or more. The third highest percentage after Luxembourg and Switzerland. Let’s improve the sentence I made before “Japanese rich people are less rich than in those from other countries but there are more rich people than in other places”.

In general I have the feeling that everything is pretty well shared in Japan compared with other countries, and money is not only for the big guys. The only thing that I don’t really like is the way the split the money: the older you are, the more money you earn, it doesn’t really matter if you are doing things well or not. But in other places it would be: the more friends you have in a company/organization the more money you earn.